bidirectional
(adjective)
Operating or functioning in two directions (usually opposite).
Examples of bidirectional in the following topics:
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The Link Between Psychology and Health
- Physical and mental health have a bidirectional relationship that can be influenced by many factors, such as exercise and hormones.
- An example of the bidirectional relationship between mental and physical health can be seen in the association between depression and physical exercise.
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Bulk Flow: Filtration and Reabsorption
- The movement of materials across the capillary wall is dependent on pressure and is bidirectional depending on the net filtration pressure derived from the four Starling forces.
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Anion Regulation
- The bidirectional arrows indicate that the reactions can go in either direction depending on the concentrations of the reactants and products.
- In the lungs, CO2 is produced from bicarbonate and removed as metabolic waste through the reverse reaction of the bicarbonate bidirectional equation.
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Binary Fission
- Replication of the DNA is bidirectional, moving away from the origin on both strands of the loop simultaneously.
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Capillaries
- This allows bidirectional diffusion depending on osmotic gradients.
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Stepwise Regression
- Bidirectional elimination, a combination of the above, tests at each step for variables to be included or excluded.
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Socioemotional Development in Childhood
- Additionally, the most socially productive relationship between children and adults is bidirectional, where both parties actively define a shared culture.
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Sympathetic Responses
- Messages travel through the SNS in a bidirectional flow.
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Free Bug Trackers
- It has a fairly intuitive Web-based user interface, flexible configuration (multiple projects, role-based access control, custom fields, etc), Gantt charting, calendaring, bidirectional email interaction, and more.